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Learn Microsoft PowerApps

Learn Microsoft PowerApps

By : Matthew Weston
2.6 (12)
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Learn Microsoft PowerApps

Learn Microsoft PowerApps

2.6 (12)
By: Matthew Weston

Overview of this book

Microsoft PowerApps provides a modern approach to building business applications for mobile, tablet, and browser. Learn Microsoft PowerApps will guide you in creating powerful and productive apps that will add value to your organization by helping you transform old and inefficient processes and workflows. Starting with an introduction to PowerApps, this book will help you set up and configure your first application. You’ll explore a variety of built-in templates and understand the key difference between types of applications such as canvas and model-driven apps, which are used to create apps for specific business scenarios. In addition to this, you’ll learn how to generate and integrate apps directly with SharePoint, and gain an understanding of PowerApps key components such as connectors and formulas. As you advance, you’ll be able to use various controls and data sources, including technologies such as GPS, and combine them to create an iterative app. Finally, the book will help you understand how PowerApps can use several Microsoft Power Automate and Azure functionalities to improve your applications. By the end of this PowerApps book, you’ll be ready to confidently develop lightweight business applications with minimal code.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
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Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with PowerApps
6
Section 2: Developing Your PowerApp
11
Section 3: Extending the Capabilities of Your PowerApp
18
Section 4: Working with Model-Driven Apps
21
Section 5: Governing PowerApps

Using conditions

Conditions are ways of carrying out a calculation to provide a true or false outcome. They are used to provide branches in logic, so if one condition is met, then action A will ensue. If not, then something else will happen.

If

The most common and useful condition is the If function, which takes in three arguments:

  • The test
  • What to do if the test returns true
  • What to do if the test returns false

In the following example, you will see that we can also combine the outputs of other functions into our condition to return a different output:

If(Text(Today(),"dddd") = "Saturday","Weekend :)","Weekday :(")
Figure 6.16: An example of an If function being used to change the output of a label

There will be occasions where your condition will depend on multiple inputs being compared to provide the evaluation. Multiple conditions will always be either AND or OR in nature and can be defined using this syntax:

  • AND / &&
  • OR / ||

In...

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